Saturday, April 20, 2024

Are Iran's Nine Lives Nearing an End? ~ VDH


The theocracy of Iran has been the world's arch-embassy attacker over the last half-century.

So it has zero credibility in crying foul over Israel's April 1 attacks on its "consulate" in Damascus and the killing of Iran's kingpin terrorists of the Revolutionary Guard Corps there.

Remember, the world was first introduced to the Iranian ayatollahs by their violent takeover of the U.S. embassy in Tehran in 1980.

Iranian surrogates next bombed the American embassy in Beirut and the Marine barracks in 1983.

In fact, Iran has attacked U.S. and Israeli diplomatic posts off and on for decades, most recently in 2023, when Iran helped plan an attack on the U.S. embassy in Baghdad.

For this reason and several others, Iran's justification for sending 170 drones, 30 cruise missiles, and 120 ballistic missiles into Israel because Israel had bombed an Iranian diplomatic post is completely ridiculous.

One, Iran has never honored diplomatic immunity. Instead, it habitually attacks and kills embassy personnel and blows up diplomatic facilities across the world.

Two, on April 1, the Israelis attacked a pseudo-"consulate" in Damascus which was hosting grandees of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps as they planned terrorist attacks on Israel.

Without Iran, the Middle East might have had a chance to use its enormous oil and natural gas wealth to lift its 500 million people out of poverty rather than to be mired in constant tribal and religious anti-Israeli, anti-American, and anti-Western terrorism.

During the Iraq War, Iran's Shiite terrorists and its massive supplies of deadly shaped-charge explosive devices killed hundreds of Americans. It routinely hijacks container ships in the Straits of Hormuz and stages near collisions with American ships and planes.

How does Iran get away with nonstop anti-Western terrorism, its constant harassment of Persian Gulf maritime traffic, its efforts to subvert Sunni moderate regimes, and its serial hostage-taking?

The theocrats operate on three general principles.

One, Iran is careful never to attack a major power directly.

Until this week, it had never sent missiles and drones into Israel. Its economy is one-dimensionally dependent on oil exports. And its paranoid government distrusts its own people, who have no access to free elections.

So Iranian strategy over the last few decades has relied on surrogates--especially expendable Arab Shiite terrorists in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen, along with the Sunni Arabs of Hamas -- to do its dirty work of killing Israelis and Americans.

It loudly egged all of them on and then cowardly denied responsibility once it feared Israeli or American retaliation.

Two, it has fooled Western governments and especially left-wing American administrations by posing as a persecuted victim. Iran claims it is the champion of aggrieved Shiite Arab and Persian minorities, unfairly exploited by Israel, moderate Arab regimes, and rich Sunni Gulf monarchies.

Three, Iran hopes its pseudo-diplomatic outreach to left-wing Western governments, coupled with its lunatic existential threats and unleashing terrorist attacks on its enemies, can coax or bully the West into granting it concessions -- especially time to acquire a dozen or so nuclear weapons.

Yet for all its loud, creepy threats, Iran is incredibly weak and vulnerable.

Israel and its allies shot down almost all its recent nocturnal missile and drone barrages. Lots of other missiles reportedly blew up on liftoff in Iran or crashed in transit.

Before the Biden appeasement of Iran, the Trump administration had isolated and nearly bankrupted Tehran and its proxies. Its Revolutionary Guard terrorist planners proved to be easy targets once they operated outside Iran.

Iran's only hope is to get a bomb and, with it, nuclear deterrence to prevent retaliation when it increases its terrorist surrogate attacks on Israel, the West, and international commerce.

Yet now Iran may have jumped the shark by attacking the Israeli homeland for the first time. It is learning that it has almost no sympathetic allies.

Does even the Lebanese Hezbollah really want to take revenge against Israel on behalf of Persian Iran, only to see its Shiite neighborhoods in Lebanon reduced to rubble?

Do all the pro-Hamas protestors on American campuses and in the streets really want to show Americans they celebrate Iranian attacks and a potential Iranian war against the United States?

Does Iran really believe 99 percent of any future Israel barrage against Iranian targets would fail to hit targets in the fashion that its own recent launches failed?

Does Iran really believe that its sheer incompetence in attacking Israel warrants them a pardon -- as if they should be excused for trying, but not succeeding, to kill thousands of Jews?

In sum, by unleashing a terrorist war in the Middle East and targeting the Israeli homeland, Iran may wake up soon and learn Israel, America, or both might retaliate for a half-century of its terrorist aggression -- and mostly to the indifference or even the delight of most of the world.



NC rally, And we Know, and more- April 20

 




The Republicans Are Really a Mess


This week was Tax Week, and the Republicans seem to be determined to take your tax money and give it to foreigners. Now, sometimes that is in our interest. I think it's in our interest in Israel and Taiwan. But why are we giving more money to Ukraine? I don't have a problem giving some money to Ukraine, but I have a problem supporting a strategy that I don't understand. What is the strategy here? Overall, Republicans are really a mess. They are not united, while the Democrats are. All the left needs to do is sit there and let Republicans tear themselves apart, and they are tearing themselves apart because Speaker Mike Johnson's not doing what he promised to do.

WARNING: CONTAINS EXPLICIT LANGUAGE


'Hating America, 101' – A Course for Homegrown Terrorists?


“Death to Israel!”

“Death to America!”

It sounds like something you’d hear chanted by hundreds of brainwashed young people in the streets of Tehran.

But as we saw this week, those are the chants of our own children on college campuses.

People can agree or disagree on what the Israeli military is doing to the Palestinians in Gaza to punish Hamas for its attack on Oct. 7, or what our State Department is doing wrong in the Middle East.

And am I seriously worried about Joe Biden’s weak, confused and destructive foreign policy in the Middle East – and everywhere else? Absolutely.

But what terrifies me the most – and saddens me the most – is that we are now seeing crowds of our young people calling for the death of America.

I am terrified of what’s going on in Minnesota, Michigan and Illinois.

Those Middle American places – what I’d be calling “Gaza West” if I were president – have become breeding grounds for what in my mind look like future homegrown terrorists.

We have generously allowed tens of thousands of people from the poorest and least free corners of the world to come to this country – and their children have grown up to hate America.

If you go to Gaza, it’s no surprise that you will find children being brought up by Hamas to hate Israel and America. It’s the political indoctrination kids also get in Iran and elsewhere in the Mideast.

But now here at home we are seeing that same hateful philosophy taught on our college campuses by professors who are brainwashing students to hate America while siding with terrorists who want to destroy Israel.

Is “Hate America First” widespread? No. Is it a mass movement like the Vietnam war protests? No.

Most American college kids are far more concerned about the records of their sports teams, midterms and the next beer fest than who’s dying in Israel, Gaza or anywhere else.

But teaching “Hatred of America 101” in Michigan, Minnesota, and Illinois is like a cancer – and cancer spreads.

Last week at a council meeting in Bakersfield, Calif., we saw a woman arrested for threatening to murder 18 members of the city council if they didn’t pass a resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza. She’s now out on bail, of course.

How long will it be before some crazed American college kid wearing a bomb walks into a schoolhouse or church and blows himself up to protest our government’s support of Israel?

I don’t think it will be more than a year or two, if not sooner, that we will see a homegrown suicide bomber.

When I hear a bunch of American college kids and adults who should know better chanting “Death to America,” I take it personally.

What they’re really saying is, “Death to me and you.” I’m an American. You’re an American. We’re all Americans – or used to be.

Last week I went to see the disturbing new movie “Civil War,” which is set in the near future when the U.S. is controlled by a dystopian dictatorship and has been torn apart by the bloody Second American Civil War.

The movie really terrified me. I know it’s only Hollywood. And I’m still an optimist about the future of America and the good sense of its people.

But based on the anger and hate we’re seeing today, it’s not a stretch to think that while I watched the violence and hatred depicted in “Civil War” I was looking at a preview of what’s coming soon to America.



Democrats Give More Credence to Donald Trump's Talk of a 'Rigged Witch Hunt'


The first week of Donald Trump's "hush money" trial will come to a close on Friday and, after some fits and starts, jury selection is finally nearing completion. Despite moving toward likely opening statements on Monday after filling out the panel of 12 jurors and six alternates, questions about the hands in which Trump's fate now lies — and how they were selected — are justifiably growing. 

For one, the math was never in Trump's favor. With almost universal name recognition — from his time hosting "The Apprentice" shows, being a staple of New York society, and then president of the United States — and wall-to-wall coverage of the legal cases brought against him since leaving office, most everyone knows and has an opinion of him. In a jurisdiction where he drew some 12 percent support in the last election, the deck was seemingly stacked against him. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg certainly counted on it. 

As was predictable, more than half of the 200-member pool called this week self-identified as being unable to consider the case fairly and impartially. 

The first day saw 96 members of the pool called before the judge. When asked if they believed they'd be unable to consider the case fairly, more than 50 raised their hands and were dismissed. 

After two already-seated jurors were excused — one who believed her identity as a juror had become public and no longer believed she could be fair and impartial and another who prosecutors believed had given inaccurate answers to questions — another 96 members of the pool were brought in. Again, when asked if anyone would be unable to consider the case impartially, 48 raised their hands and were excused. 

That is, fewer than half of potential jurors even thought they could adjudicate claims presented in a trial against Trump fairly — and that was before they'd even faced the 42 multi-part questions laid out by the judge in the trial's juror questionnaire. 

Unsurprisingly, the questionnaire turned up even more hostile-to-Trump members of the pool. Some were forced to read their previous social media posts calling him every name in the book. "Oops, that sounds bad," one potential juror admitted of her screeds against Trump that ultimately saw her dismissed. 

The courtroom sounded like the green room at CNN or MSNBC at times as potential jurors explained their feelings about Trump and were required to read aloud their rants against a man whose 2020 loss many celebrated. 

One prospective juror told the judge "I don't like [Trump's] persona" and "how he presents himself in public." Despite objections from the defense, she was seated as a juror because the former president's legal team had already used up its ten peremptory challenge "strikes" available to each side that allow a potential juror to be dismissed without explanation. Any other objections to a prospective juror's ability to be impartial must be explained and the judge must agree for them to be dismissed. 

Judge Merchan, of course, has not remained above the political fray. As Townhall reported last year, the judge evaluating potential jurors' fitness to render a fair verdict in the case has donated to Democrats, including Joe Biden. In addition, Merchan donated to a group dedicated to "resisting Trump and the Republican Party." 

In a jury pool where more than half self-identified as being too biased to make a fair judgment brd on the facts presented in court, the number of peremptory challenges was simply not enough. With Merchan deciding on the fitness of other potential jurors beyond the ten peremptory strikes, the odds of impaneling an impartial jury shrunk again. 

The idea of the right to be judged by a fair jury composed of one's contemporaries originated with the Magna Carta more than 800 years ago. "No free man shall be seized, imprisoned, dispossessed, outlawed, exiled or ruined in any way, nor in any way proceeded against, except by the lawful judgment of his peers and the law of the land," the charter declared. 

Some 570 years after that document birthed the idea of a fair jury as a right, the ratification of the Bill of Rights brought Americans a similar guarantee for the accused to "enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed."

An impartial jury is Trump's — and any American's — right. Is that the case in New York where even a juror who expressed personal disapproval of the former president was seated because a judge — one who donated to Trump's 2020 and current opponent along with a group called "Stop Republicans" — believed the juror could be fair? In a case where Trump is under a gag order prohibiting him from speaking about key players in the trial even while they continue to bluster about him?

Like most of the Democrats' attempts to drag Trump down, they've ultimately given more credence to his talk of a "rigged witch hunt" seeking to keep him out of the White House by, seemingly, any means necessary.



Trump’s Jury Trial Will Be As ‘Fair’ As The Russia Hoax And 2020 Election


New York County, which encompasses Manhattan, 
voted for Biden over Trump 87 percent to 12 percent in 2020.



Jury selection for 12 jurors wrapped up Thursday in Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s lawfare against former President Donald Trump, with the next phase of the trial expected to begin as early as Monday. But with two selected jurors booted for potential bias and perjury and at least one juror who made clear she doesn’t like Trump’s “persona,” can he really get a fair trial?

Who Are the Jurors?

After two of the initial seven selected jurors were struck from the panel, another seven were chosen Thursday. The jurors will hear Bragg’s claim that Trump broke the law by allegedly classifying payments made by his then-lawyer, Michael Cohen, to pornographer Stormy Daniels as part of a nondisclosure agreement as “legal fees” instead of campaign expenditures. Federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York declined to charge Trump in 2018.

The final selection of jurors is as follows:

  • A salesman originally from Ireland who follows MSNBC, The New York Times, the Daily Mail, and Fox News. This juror is reportedly set to serve as the case’s foreman, according to ABC News.
  • A corporate lawyer from Oregon who reads the NYT, Google News, and the Wall Street Journal. The juror “suggested that he could infer the former president’s intent without ‘reading his mind,'” according to ABC News.
  • A man who works in finance and follows Michael Cohen — a convicted liar and the prosecution’s star witness — on social media. The juror also said he believes Trump did some good for the nation, The New York Times reported.
  • A lawyer who told the court he has “political views as to the Trump presidency” in that he agrees with some policies but disagrees with others, according to The Times.
  • A product development manager who said she did not like Trump’s “persona,” according to ABC News.
  • A female health care worker who enjoys faith-based podcasts.
  • A woman who “works in an educational setting” and acknowledged that because Trump “was our president, everyone knows who he is,” according to The Times.
  • A businessman who likes to listen to podcasts on behavioral psychology.
  • A retired wealth manager who claims he has no opinions that would hinder his ability to be impartial.
  • An engineer who said, “No, not really,” when asked if he has strong feelings about Trump, according to the NYT.
  • An English teacher from Harlem who appreciated Trump speaking “his mind,” according to ABC News.
  • A female who works in technology and relies on the NYT, Google, Facebook and TikTok for news. According to the NYT, “she said she probably has different beliefs than Mr. Trump, but that ‘this is a free country.’”

Two jurors were struck Thursday, one who admitted her inability to be impartial and another who had a possible history of vandalizing conservative political posters. One female juror told the court “outside influences” could impact her decision-making and expressed concerns about her identity becoming public, according to the Associated Press (AP).

“Yesterday alone I had friends, colleagues and family push things to my phone regarding questioning my identity as a juror,” the woman reportedly said. “I don’t believe at this point that I can be fair and unbiased and let the outside influences not affect my decision making in the courtroom.”

A second juror was dismissed after the prosecution argued he may have been dishonest about his past when he claimed he had never been arrested. “Prosecutors said they found an article about a person with the same name who had been arrested in the 1990s for tearing down posters pertaining to the political right in suburban Westchester County,” the AP reported.

Will Jurors Give a ‘Common Sense Judgment’?

The Supreme Court held in the 1975 case Taylor v. Louisiana that “The purpose of a jury is to guard against the exercise of arbitrary power — to make available the common sense judgment of the community as a hedge against the overzealous or mistaken prosecutor … or biased response of a judge.”

The Sixth Amendment is designed to protect the accused from any arbitrary and capricious trials perpetrated by a weaponized government. A jury of the accused’s peers is meant to check the power of the government, a right created in response to the British courts’ habit of permitting judges to compel juries to change their verdict if the outcome was not favored by the judge.

But from what we know of the Manhattan jury pool, it’s not clear these New Yorkers will be willing to check the government on a case that experts on both sides of the aisle have called “dubious.” New York County, which encompasses Manhattan, voted for Joe Biden over Trump 87 percent to 12 percent in 2020.

Trump’s lawyer objected to one potential juror who posted a video of a crowd of people celebrating Biden’s 2020 victory. Judge Juan Merchan decided to chastise Trump instead and refused to strike the potential juror for cause.

Another potential juror who was excused because of a job conflict told reporters outside of the courthouse that while she believes it is important for Trump to get a fair trial, she did not “approve of what he did as president.

Meanwhile of the dozen jurors selected, a number said they get their news from corporate media like The New York Times — one of the outlets that spent years disparaging Trump and spreading false information about him.

Three NYT reporters won Pulitzer Prizes for their “reporting” on the Russia-collusion hoax, which they based on anonymous sources. But FBI official Peter Strzok, who ran the investigation into the alleged collusion, privately acknowledged the report was filled with “misleading and inaccurate” information, as pointed out by The Federalist’s Mollie Hemingway.

Other jurors cited Google as a news source. Google “interfered” in elections at least 41 times over the past 16 years to harm candidates “who threatened [Google’s] left-wing candidate of choice,” a study from the Media Research Center found. In 2020, corporate media and Big Tech suppressed a bombshell report about the Biden family’s corrupt foreign business dealings mere weeks before the presidential election, adding to a pattern of burying negative press about Trump’s opponent while spreading lies about Trump.



Biden Brags About Defying the Supreme Court As the Slurring and Incoherence Hit a Fever Pitch


Nick Arama reporting for RedState 

Joe Biden seems to be getting worse lately. Perhaps it's because so many things are blowing up because of his failed policies, especially in the Middle East. Perhaps it's also because they're making him run around to more events to campaign so they're upping what he has to do and it's showing. Perhaps his condition is just getting worse. I tend to think it's all the above. 

Whatever it is, you can see an increase in his incoherence and confusion, particularly over the past couple of weeks.

But they're still playing this game where they tell him to jog a few steps to prove how vigorous he is. 

Here he is speaking at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers’ Construction and Maintenance Conference in Washington, D.C. on Friday. 

Jogging a couple of steps doesn't translate to having the coherence for the job, and unfortunately, the ridiculous jog doesn't help that. 

This is not a stutter; this is something wrong. Listen as he is barely coherent, can't fully form words, and leaves out other words.

That's why is what training? I'm not sure he even knows. 

But whatever he's saying, he really, really means it. That's why he's yelling. That shows his passion. Who cares if it makes any sense? 

This was perhaps the worst one of them all -- what the heck was that word? Fedurahhhh. 

We probably all remember "Truananualdepressure." But now it seems like that's happening all the time. 

He claimed people were doing better and he "could go on." 

But he can't, because they aren't. 

The guy who claims he wants to bring people together and protect democracy then attacked Republicans and the Supreme Court. He disparaged Americans who were MAGA Republicans as a "different breed of cat."

Biden also bragged about ignoring the ruling of the Supreme Court and doing what he wanted when it came to canceling student debt on the back of the taxpayers. 

It's a blatant vote-buying attempt. Biden doesn't care about "fairness" to the taxpayers who have to underwrite this move or how it upsets the "democracy" and norms. This was after he claimed that there was a choice between "freedom" and "democracy" on Thursday. 

They are placing us all in danger by refusing to acknowledge his issues. But all they care about is trying to hold onto power. 



7 Surprising Benefits of Nose Breathing

 Exploring the transformative power of nasal breathing, from shielding against illness to enhancing brain function and appearance.

https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/7-surprising-benefits-of-nose-breathing-5574225?&utm_source=MB_article_paid&utm_campaign=MB_article_2024-04-20-ca&utm_medium=email&est=ouBlDRsnkmxXX1PpvvfQIaqkqMQmYQPSVLDX3d%2Fkf7MlBF3FaD4oGucMcr%2Bqivn99eGF&utm_content=highlight-news-1

Wellness trends often entice with promises of a healthier, happier life—and the latest one might raise an eyebrow. An increasing number of people are deliberately taping their mouths shut.

At first glance, this practice may seem odd, yet its goal is to encourage something as fundamental as breathing—specifically, breathing through the nose. Despite its unconventional appearance, this trend is gaining traction, attracting everyone from Hollywood celebrities to everyday fitness buffs.

What is fueling this peculiar trend? Emerging studies reveal significant advantages of nasal breathing over mouth breathing. From improving general health and sleep to enhancing cognitive abilities, the reasons to breathe through your nose are compelling—and encouraging nasal breathing could be more than a fleeting craze.

The Science of Breathing: Understanding the Basics

Breathing is often taken for granted. Yet how we breathe—through the nose or mouth—can profoundly affect our health. The anatomical and physiological differences between nasal and mouth breathing significantly influence our body’s oxygenation and respiratory health.

“Your nose is designed for breathing,” Stuart Sandeman, a globally recognized breathing expert and founder of Breathpod, told The Epoch Times.

He said that from birth, our bodies are designed to inhale and exhale through the nose, a process that offers numerous health advantages.

Yet factors such as nasal congestion, stress, and habitual behaviors have led to an unconscious shift toward mouth breathing. Reverting to nasal breathing is a return to our physiological roots, enhancing our body’s natural ability to function optimally.

7 Reasons to Breathe Through the Nose

1. Shield Against Illness

Our nose serves as a defender against germs and contaminants in the air. As air passes through the nasal cavity, tiny hairs and mucus trap dust, allergens, and other harmful particles, preventing them from reaching the lungs and warding off respiratory infections.“Being a nasal breather is known to provide the right milieu, the right environment, to keep that nasal microbiome at its healthiest, and promote the diversity of the microbiota in the nasal passages that can best protect you against colds and flu,” he said.
Nasal passages also play a vital role in warming and humidifying inhaled air to body temperature and adding moisture, crucial for maintaining respiratory tract health. This function becomes especially important in arid or cold climates, where dry air can irritate the lungs and airways, increasing susceptibility to infections.

2. Enhance Oxygen Absorption

Nasal breathing helps better regulate the amount of oxygen and carbon dioxide entering the bloodstream. The nasal passage produces nitric oxide, a gas that plays a crucial role in increasing blood flow and oxygen delivery to vital organs. This process is essential for maintaining efficient oxygen–carbon dioxide exchange and cardiovascular health.
Research has long shown that when people breathe through their noses instead of their mouths, the oxygen levels in their blood can be as much as 10 percent higher, indicating that nasal breathing is more effective in delivering oxygen to the bloodstream.
Nose breathing imposes about 50 percent more resistance to the air stream than mouth breathing, enhancing oxygen uptake by 10 to 20 percent. This resistance optimizes oxygen–carbon dioxide exchange and ensures a more efficient delivery of oxygen to vital organs, bolstering overall health and endurance.

3. Maintain a Healthy Smile

Nasal breathing is not only about taking a breath—it’s a significant ally for oral health. Mouth breathing can dry out the mouth, setting the stage for tooth decay and gum disease. In contrast, nasal breathing keeps the mouth’s natural cleansing system—saliva—flowing.
“Breathing through your nose creates a moist environment in your mouth. This allows saliva to do its job in preventing harmful bacteria from accumulating on your teeth and gums. Nasal breathing also helps prevent abnormal jaw growth in children,” Dr. Kyle Gernhofer, dentist and CEO of DenScore, told The Epoch Times.
Research links mouth breathing to increased oral acidity, a factor in enamel erosion and cavities. Conversely, nasal breathers tend to have better oral health, thanks to the protective role of saliva. The way we breathe can have a lasting effect on our dental well-being.

4. Improve Sleep

Switching to nasal breathing could be the key to better sleep. Mouth breathing during sleep often leads to a dry throat and disrupted rest. In contrast, nasal breathing promotes uninterrupted and deeper sleep by maintaining optimal blood oxygen and carbon dioxide levels.
Highlighting the dangers of mouth breathing at night, Mr. Huberman said: “Mouth breathing during sleep is not just undesirable; it is actually dangerous—as it is associated with sleep apnea. ... The solution is to become a nasal breather as much of the time as possible and especially during sleep.” A shift to nasal breathing stabilizes breathing patterns and enhances overall sleep quality, potentially reducing the risk of sleep-related disorders.

5. Calm the Nervous System

Nasal breathing plays a pivotal role in regulating the nervous system, particularly balancing the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems. This regulation is crucial for stress reduction and overall well-being. When we breathe through our noses, we take slower, deeper breaths that activate the parasympathetic nervous system, leading to a calmer and more relaxed state.
More recent research published in Scientific Reports highlights the profound effect of controlled breathing on stress and mental health. This comprehensive study confirms that breathwork, particularly through nasal breathing, significantly lowers stress, anxiety, and depression in various populations.

“Nasal breathing creates resistance to airflow, so it slows the rate at which you breathe to induce a parasympathetic nervous system response, also known as ‘rest and digest,’” Mr. Sandeman said.

He noted that right nostril breathing stimulates the body’s sympathetic system, while the left enhances the parasympathetic system. This dominance shifts in a daily pattern known as the nasal cycle.

In a March 2022 study, researchers found that slow nasal breathing (SNB), a technique in yogic pranayama (practice of breath regulation), has a notable effect on the brain. Participants engaging in SNB during meditation reported experiencing a unique state of awareness, and the researchers observed significant changes in brain activity. This suggests that this type of breathing could do more than relax the body—it might also profoundly influence our thoughts and feelings.

6. Protect Your Brain

Nasal breathing is more than just a way to take in air—it’s a booster for your brain. Breathing through the nose is crucial in maintaining the proper levels of carbon dioxide in the blood, which is essential for brain health. Nasal breathing is fundamental for cognitive functions such as memory, focus, and concentration.
Recent brain imaging research shows that nasal breathing can enhance brain function during memory tasks. Compared with mouth breathing, nasal breathing activates key areas of the brain more effectively, suggesting that mouth breathing could hinder brain performance over time.

7. Improve Appearance

Nasal breathing, especially from a young age, plays a crucial role in shaping facial structure, as outlined by the Cleveland Clinic: “Mouth breathing can affect children’s facial development, causing what’s called ‘mouth breathing face.’ People who have mouth breathing face often have narrowed faces with receding chins or jaws.”
Supporting this, studies found that children who breathe through their mouths can have distinct facial structures compared with nasal breathers. This research highlights that nasal breathing contributes to a broader palate and a more balanced facial appearance, suggesting its importance for health and aesthetic development.

Adapting to Change: Techniques to Encourage Nasal Breathing

Shifting to nasal breathing can be challenging, especially for chronic mouth breathers. Here are some practical techniques and exercises to help make this transition:
  • Mouth taping at night: A simple yet effective method for nighttime is mouth taping. Using a small piece of breathable tape over the lips can encourage nasal breathing and prevent mouth breathing during sleep.

Mr. Sandeman noted that transitioning from mouth to nasal breathing can be challenging. “If you are a mouth breather, the switch to nasal breathing may feel hard at first,” he said. He suggests gradually increasing mouth-taping duration, starting from one minute to thirty minutes during the day, before progressing to overnight taping.

  • Breathing exercises: Specific breathing exercises can strengthen the respiratory system and promote nasal breathing. Activities such as alternate nostril and diaphragmatic breathing, during which you consciously breathe using your diaphragm, can be beneficial.
  • Allergy management: For those who struggle with allergies leading to nasal congestion, breathing through the nose may seem impossible. Consulting with a health care provider for long-term allergy management strategies can also be helpful.
  • Conscious practice: During the day, make a conscious effort to breathe through your nose. Set regular reminders to check your breathing pattern and correct it if you find yourself breathing through your mouth.
  • Physical exercises for the jaw and tongue: Engage in exercises that strengthen the jaw and tongue, as they play a role in maintaining an open airway and supporting nasal breathing. Simple actions such as pressing the tongue against the roof of the mouth and holding for a few seconds can be effective.


A Balanced View: When Mouth Breathing Is Necessary

Mouth breathing is sometimes unavoidable, such as during intense physical activity or when experiencing certain medical conditions. It’s important to understand when this form of breathing becomes necessary and how to mitigate its negative effects.

“Nasal breathing is how you should breathe most of the time, although there are times when breathing through your mouth will save your life,” Mr. Sandeman said.

If you unexpectedly step into the path of an oncoming car, a sharp intake of breath through your mouth triggers a rapid blood flow to your leg muscles, enabling you to swiftly leap back to safety, he explained.

Although the shift from mouth to nasal breathing might challenge the habits of a lifetime, the potential rewards speak volumes in favor of a conscious return to this natural, health-boosting practice.

Next: Could Your Breathing Be Fueling Your Anxiety?

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